Literature DB >> 18331425

Insect-damaged fossil leaves record food web response to ancient climate change and extinction.

P Wilf1.   

Abstract

Plants and herbivorous insects have dominated terrestrial ecosystems for over 300 million years. Uniquely in the fossil record, foliage with well-preserved insect damage offers abundant and diverse information both about producers and about ecological and sometimes taxonomic groups of consumers. These data are ideally suited to investigate food web response to environmental perturbations, and they represent an invaluable deep-time complement to neoecological studies of global change. Correlations between feeding diversity and temperature, between herbivory and leaf traits that are modulated by climate, and between insect diversity and plant diversity can all be investigated in deep time. To illustrate, I emphasize recent work on the time interval from the latest Cretaceous through the middle Eocene (67-47 million years ago (Ma)), including two significant events that affected life: the end-Cretaceous mass extinction (65.5 Ma) and its ensuing recovery; and globally warming temperatures across the Paleocene-Eocene boundary (55.8 Ma). Climatic effects predicted from neoecology generally hold true in these deep-time settings. Rising temperature is associated with increased herbivory in multiple studies, a result with major predictive importance for current global warming. Diverse floras are usually associated with diverse insect damage; however, recovery from the end-Cretaceous extinction reveals uncorrelated plant and insect diversity as food webs rebuilt chaotically from a drastically simplified state. Calibration studies from living forests are needed to improve interpretation of the fossil data.

Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 18331425     DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-8137.2008.02395.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  New Phytol        ISSN: 0028-646X            Impact factor:   10.151


  8 in total

Review 1.  Ecological turmoil in evolutionary dynamics of plant-insect interactions: defense to offence.

Authors:  Manasi Mishra; Purushottam R Lomate; Rakesh S Joshi; Sachin A Punekar; Vidya S Gupta; Ashok P Giri
Journal:  Planta       Date:  2015-07-10       Impact factor: 4.116

2.  Environmental and genetic control of insect abundance and herbivory along a forest elevational gradient.

Authors:  Lucas A Garibaldi; Thomas Kitzberger; Enrique J Chaneton
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2011-04-08       Impact factor: 3.225

3.  No post-Cretaceous ecosystem depression in European forests? Rich insect-feeding damage on diverse middle Palaeocene plants, Menat, France.

Authors:  Torsten Wappler; Ellen D Currano; Peter Wilf; Jes Rust; Conrad C Labandeira
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2009-09-23       Impact factor: 5.349

4.  Studying function and behavior in the fossil record.

Authors:  Michael J Benton
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2010-03-02       Impact factor: 8.029

5.  Insect leaf-chewing damage tracks herbivore richness in modern and ancient forests.

Authors:  Mónica R Carvalho; Peter Wilf; Héctor Barrios; Donald M Windsor; Ellen D Currano; Conrad C Labandeira; Carlos A Jaramillo
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-05-02       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  Novel insect leaf-mining after the end-Cretaceous extinction and the demise of cretaceous leaf miners, Great Plains, USA.

Authors:  Michael P Donovan; Peter Wilf; Conrad C Labandeira; Kirk R Johnson; Daniel J Peppe
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-07-24       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  The importance of sampling standardization for comparisons of insect herbivory in deep time: a case study from the late Palaeozoic.

Authors:  Sandra R Schachat; Conrad C Labandeira; S Augusta Maccracken
Journal:  R Soc Open Sci       Date:  2018-03-28       Impact factor: 2.963

8.  Insect herbivory on Catula gettyi gen. et sp. nov. (Lauraceae) from the Kaiparowits Formation (Late Cretaceous, Utah, USA).

Authors:  S Augusta Maccracken; Ian M Miller; Kirk R Johnson; Joseph M Sertich; Conrad C Labandeira
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2022-01-21       Impact factor: 3.752

  8 in total

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